Tag Archives: Photographer

Happy 80th Birthday to NYC Graffiti Documentarian Martha Cooper!

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Born on this date in 1942 in Baltimore, Maryland, famed photojournalist Martha Cooper took her photography skills as a staff photog for The New York Post. She became one of the most celebrated documentarians of Hip Hop’s most unrecognized subculture.

Cooper began her career as a photographer working as an intern for National Geographic in the 60s, who parlayed her into a position as a staff photographer for The Post in the 1970s. One day on her way home from work at The Post, she began taking pics of the children in her neighborhood. This was when she met HE3, who explained to Cooper the importance and artistic aspect of graffiti. Cooper instantly became intrigued by graffiti and, by 1984, put together a book of photographs illustrating the graffiti subculture called Subway Art, which is now recognized as the bible of graffiti and street art.

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Copper later put out another book in 2004 entitled Hip Hop Files: Photographs 1979-1984 From Here To Fame and later had a documentary produced about her life called Martha: A Picture Story in 2019.

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Happy 80th birthday to Martha, and salute her for all of her groundbreaking accomplishments that help spread the culture of graffiti around the world.

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Prince’s Personal Photographer Loses Lawsuit Over Prince Photographs

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A federal appeals court recently ruled that a marketer had an implied copyright license to distribute marketing materials that contained photographic images of the late recording artist Prince taken by Prince’s longtime photographer. 

Allen Beaulieu was Prince’s photographer from 1979 to 1984.  He shot album covers and three world tours for Prince.    In 2014 Beaulieu began working on a book of his photographs.  He hired Thomas Martin Crouse to help write stories and captions and later Clint Stockwell, who worked on scanning and storing digital copies of the photos.

In April 2016, Prince died, leading Crouse and Stockwell to expect that there would be increased interest in Beaulieu’s photographs. In May 2016, Beaulieu gave Stockwell several additional photographs to digitize for inclusion in the book. Stockwell sent an MP4 slideshow of selected photographs and a press release to several investors.

Beaulieu’s collaboration with Stockwell and Crouse fell apart, and Beaulieu demanded his photographs back.   His attorney was able to retrieve some from Stockwell’s home, but Beaulieu believed that Stockwell still retained a large number of them.  He subsequently filed a lawsuit against Crouse, Stockwell, his company, and Charles Sanvik, one of the investors who had received the slideshow and press release.

Beaulieu brought claims for conversion of his property, claiming that Crouse and Stockwell had taken possession of his photographs in a manner that wrongfully deprived Beaulieu of them.  However, Beaulieu could never provide the court with an inventory showing how many photographs he had given to Crouse and Stockwell, how many they had returned to him, or how many he alleged were still in their possession.  For this reason, the district court dismissed his conversion claim, ruling that it was too speculative as to the property he claimed to have been converted.

Beaulieu also brought copyright claims against Stockwell, alleging that Stockwell had copied his photographs without authorization when he had created the MP4 slideshow and press release.  The district court rejected this claim, finding that Beaulieu had granted an implied license to use the photographs for this purpose.   An implied license is one that is not written or given directly but which can be implied from the parties’ course of conduct.  Here, Stockwell had sent the slideshow and press release to Beaulieu ahead of time and described it as part of the book’s marketing plan.  Beaulieu had not objected, and had requested that additional publishers be contacted on his behalf.  Since Beaulieu was found to have granted an implied license for use of the copyrighted photographs through this conduct, his infringement claim was dismissed.  Beaulieu later appealed this issue, but the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s ruling.

Finally, Beaulieu brought a claim for tortious interference with economic advantage.  This claim requires that the “interference” must be “improper,” meaning it must be based on an act recognized by law to be wrongful.  However, because the court had already rejected the conversion claim and the copyright infringement claim, there was no “improper” action, and this claim was also rejected by the district court. 

The post Prince’s Personal Photographer Loses Lawsuit Over Prince Photographs appeared first on The Source.

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Photographer Sues Cam’ron Over ‘The Program’ Mixtape Cover

 

Cam'ron & Trouble Andrew Reebok 3AM Event 4

Source: Reebok / Courtesy of Reebok

We all know Cam’ron keeps computers ‘puting—we hope his lawyers can as well. The Diplomats front man has been hit with a fresh lawsuit stemming from his last studio effort.

The New York Post is reporting that photographer Eli Reed has filed a claim alleging that Killa unlawfully used his work for the cover of The Program. The 2017 release features a black and white photo of seven young kids playing on top of an abandoned car. This same picture graces the photog’s 2015 book Eli Reed: A Long Walk Home.

Instagram Photo

He asserts that Cam “displayed the Photograph at the point of sale of the mixtape, plastered the Photograph all over merchandise, created videos on his social media pages featuring the Photograph, and even promoted his collaboration with Reebok using the Photograph, all without the least regard for Reed’s intellectual property rights.”

As expected the “Get Em Girls” rapper had his reasons for incorporating the image into his album roll out. According to court filings he never bothered to seek approval as the photo is “in black-and-white, and was presumed to be old and in the public domain.” Reed is seeking damages, all profits from The Program and an injunction stopping the Harlem native from using the shot.

Cam’ron has yet to comment on the matter.

Photo: WENN.com

 

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